Notice: This is the official website of the All Empires History Community (Reg. 10 Feb 2002)

  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Register Register  Login Login

Women's Role in Prehistory Reconsidered

 Post Reply Post Reply
Author
red clay View Drop Down
Administrator
Administrator
Avatar
Tomato Master Emeritus

Joined: 14-Jan-2006
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 10226
  Quote red clay Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Women's Role in Prehistory Reconsidered
    Posted: 08-Feb-2007 at 06:32
Women played major role in history --
from the 'start' ..
 

The authors...archaeologists J.M. Adovasio, the founder and director of the Mercyhurst Archaeological Institute; Olga Soffer, a professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; and Jake Page, a freelance writer. Adovasio is an expert on perishable prehistoric artifacts; Soffer is an expert on the Paleolithic Period and peoples of the Old World...

In fact, the authors' spadework led them to a striking conclusion: that "female humans have been the chief engine in the unprecedented high level of human sociability; were the inventors of the most useful of tools called the String Revolution; have shared equally in the provision of food for human societies; almost certainly drove the human invention of language; and were the ones who created agriculture. "

Upfront they assert that the stereotypical image of early woman comes mainly from modern males who until the last few decades "have dominated the fields of anthropology and archaeology, " fixated on stones and bones and "assumed that it was a man's world back in the Pleistocene and earlier."

The consequence: "Women were largely ignored," the authors wrote, conceding that "the bias was, in a sense, self-fulfilling, but it was more an unconscious bias than a deliberate and nasty plot against women..."

In their investigation of the "grand procession of evolution," including the role of women, the authors draw on evidence from the fossil record, including artifacts and ecofacts; today's primates in general and the great apes in particular; the behaviors of hunters and gatherers who are still with us, such as the San or !Kung of the Kalahari Desert in southern Africa and the Aboriginals in Australia; and genetic and molecular biology...

One of the stereotypes the authors chip away hardest at is the picture of Upper Paleolithic society and economics "dominated by the mighty hunters setting out to slaughter mammoths and other large animals."

It turns out that "there is no evidence of Upper Paleolithic assemblages of enough hunters 40 or so to take down a mammoth, much less the number needed to wipe out a herd. Only the foolhardiest would attempt to kill an animal that stands 14 feet high and has a notoriously bad temper when annoyed."

Because most of the animal remains strewn around places like Dolni Vestonice in the Czech Republic consist of the bones of small mammals like hares and foxes, "The picture of Man the Mighty Hunter is now fading out of the annals of prehistory."

It is more plausible that men and women and even children and the elderly in places like Dolni Vestonice as far back as 27,000 years all contributed to the work of living communally. There is plenty of evidence that immense nets, probably made by women, were tossed over large areas to trap Sunday dinners.

The evidence for master weaving comes from fiber artifacts and from 200 "Venus" figurines and figurine fragments found across Europe "the most representational three-dimensional images made in the Gravettian period some 27,000 to 22,000 years ago. Nothing is their equal before this period from anywhere in the world, and thousands of years go by before anything comparable appears again," the authors wrote.

Yet many observers, male and female, amateur and professional, have missed the fact that many of these stone babes were partly clad.

In 1998, Adovasio and Soffer began their scrutiny of the Venuses, and found that what others saw as braided hair on the Venus of Willendorf, for example, actually was an exquisitely carved hat, constructed similarly to many American Indian baskets today.

So precise is the carving that "it is not unreasonable to think that, among the functions involved in this Upper Paleolithic masterpiece, it served as a blueprint or instruction manual showing weavers how to make such hats."

Adovasio and Soffer also discovered that other Venuses wore carved woven hats and also bandeaus, belts and string skirts items far too flimsy for daily wear.

The clothing suggests that "such apparel was a 'woman thing,' not worn by males, and that it served to immortalize at some great effort the fact that such apparel set women or at least certain women apart in a social category of their own."

One can conclude, the authors wrote, that the clothing on the Gravettian Venuses symbolized achievement or prestige. Moreover, the precision with which the woven items were carved "leads almost inevitably to the conclusion that they were created by the weavers themselves, or at least under the sharp-eyed tutelage of the weavers."

"That it was almost surely women who did most of this fine weaving and basketry is one matter to which the ethnographic record appears to be a reliable guide."

Public release date: 5-Feb-2007
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
 
"Arguing with someone who hates you or your ideas, is like playing chess with a pigeon. No matter what move you make, your opponent will walk all over the board and scramble the pieces".
Unknown.
Back to Top
Top Gun View Drop Down
Baron
Baron

Suspended

Joined: 19-Jan-2007
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 493
  Quote Top Gun Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-Feb-2007 at 07:46
women always have the greatest role in history and in wars.
I read a book where women could better govern then men and I agree with that idea
Back to Top
Paul View Drop Down
General
General
Avatar
AE Immoderator

Joined: 21-Aug-2004
Location: Hyperborea
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 952
  Quote Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-Feb-2007 at 09:57
The idea is not new, but has been around since the seveties. However has been on the fringes of research.
 
What purpetuated the myth was not so-much done because of modern male bias, more from the theory they had to work with. The Savanna Theory of evolution where apes ventured out onto the African plains and became hunter-gatherers create the male killer-ape idea.
 
Since the 1990's when the theory was conclusively proved wrong, others theories have come forward. Particularly the notion of our ancestor living in a more cooperative family grooup and not hunting.
 
I even wrote an article on the subject for a past issue of the magazine.
 
 
Light blue touch paper and stand well back

http://www.maquahuitl.co.uk

http://www.toltecitztli.co.uk
Back to Top
morticia View Drop Down
Sultan
Sultan
Avatar
Retired AE Editor

Joined: 09-Aug-2005
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2077
  Quote morticia Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-Feb-2007 at 16:15

Yes, I have read that during the Paleolithic period in Europe, people saw the universe as an all giving mother, hence, women were venerated for possessing the ability to give birth. Archeological findings have also concluded, in some of the paintings found on caves, that the female figures were always placed in the center, surrounded by the masculine symbols. When drawings of animals were found, they were often painted with big bellies, implying pregnancy. Also on burial sites, some statuettes were found describing a pregnant female with broad hips with special emphasis in the pubic triangle (implying a female-centered form of worship). However, there is no evidence to suggest that any of the cultures had a matriarchal society. In fact, evidence has supported the idea of a society where men and women worked together side by side sharing equally important and different roles (almost like utopia). This idea, of course, declined over time to the point where women were treated as slaves with societies completely male centered.   

A most interesting article, Red Clay. Thank you for posting same.

Paul, thats a very interesting article you wrote about the Aquatic Ape Hypothesis.

"Morty

Trust in God: She will provide." -- Emmeline Pankhurst
Back to Top
Top Gun View Drop Down
Baron
Baron

Suspended

Joined: 19-Jan-2007
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 493
  Quote Top Gun Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09-Feb-2007 at 09:34
I don't understand anything of that text and whats about it if I see the other comments
Back to Top
morticia View Drop Down
Sultan
Sultan
Avatar
Retired AE Editor

Joined: 09-Aug-2005
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2077
  Quote morticia Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09-Feb-2007 at 15:39
Originally posted by Top Gun

I don't understand anything of that text and whats about it if I see the other comments


Hello Top Gun: Thank you for your contribution to the women's history forum. I'm sorry this topic has confused you. If you read Red Clay's article carefully, I'm sure you can get the gist of it. It states some considerations of the importance of the role of women in prehistory.   
"Morty

Trust in God: She will provide." -- Emmeline Pankhurst
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down

Bulletin Board Software by Web Wiz Forums® version 9.56a [Free Express Edition]
Copyright ©2001-2009 Web Wiz

This page was generated in 0.047 seconds.